(From L) Pastor Gregor Hohberg, Rabbi Tovia Ben-Chorin and Imam Kadir Sanci hold three bricks as they pose for photographers in the vacant lot where they hope to build a multifaith prayer building, in Berlin (AFP Photo / John Macdougall) / AFP

Berlin ‘Tolerance Trio’ has come together to build a joint house of worship in Berlin, to counter the growing religious tensions in an increasingly multi-cultural Europe. Now they are looking to source €43.5 million with crowdfunding.

"I believe in the power of dialogue. In the world we live in
we have two possibilities: war or peace. Peace is a process and
in order to achieve it, you have to talk to each other,"
Rabbi Ben Chorin, who was at the roots of the project, the told
AP.

The House of One will be 40 meters tall, with a shared
inter-religious space for 380 people at its heart, and a mosque,
synagogue and church branching off in different directions.

Designed by trendy German architect Wilfried Kuehn, who won an
international competition, the three adjuncts will all be
different in style, but with certain repeating motifs, to
emphasize the similarities as well as the differences between the
Abrahamic faiths. The project launching three years ago, a
building permit has already been issued, with plans to start
construction in 2016 on a historic site in the heart of Berlin.

"We have noticed, as a community here in the middle of the
city, that a lot of people want to meet people from different
backgrounds and religions and that there is a strong desire to
show that people from different religions can get along,"
said Pastor Gregor Hohberg of Berlin's St. Petri parish, who says
that the square earmarked for construction has already started to
attract worshippers from different religions for side-by-side
prayers.

Rabbi Tovia Ben-Chorin, Imam Kadir Sanci and Pastor Gregor
Hohberg, whose Tolerance Trio moniker is a revival of a 1930s US
religious union, will now rely on donations to gather the
required sum. Supporters are encouraged to “buy a brick” online
for 10 euros, though since the start of the summer less than
€40,000 has been collected.

The founders now say that they will also need donations from
larger religious bodies, as well as Berlin’s worshippers, who
potentially number about 300,000 Muslims and 50,000 Jews.

Among the more interesting organizations on the board of the
House of One, which could help its construction is the Forum for
Intercultural Dialogue (FID), a movement that aims to spread
moderate Islam and monitor extremism, under the auspices of
Fethullah Gulen, the arch-nemesis of Turkey’s Prime Minister
Tayyip Erdogan.

And fighting radicalism is as central an aim of the House of One
as the promotion of the various religions inside. The Gaza
conflict has not only brought out strong political opposition to
Israel, but has reignited ugly manifestations of intolerance,
with multiple synagogue attacks in France, and elsewhere on the
continent.

Even before Operation Protective Edge, EU agencies estimated that
40 percent of all recorded hate crimes in Europe targeted Jews.

“It is very important for us to overcome all the negative
news in the world,” said Imam Sanci.

"I have the wish, for my children, my family, for myself and
for everyone, that diversity becomes a reality and that people
will accept each other in their otherness."